INTERVENTION
BY H.E. MSGR. RENATO R. MARTINOAT THE FIRST COMMITTEEOF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
OF THE UNITED NATIONSON GENERAL AND COMPLETE DISARMAMENT

Tuesday, 1 October 2002

Mr. Chairman,

The Holy See congratulates you on your election as Chairman and
my Delegation assures you of its cooperation in your leadership of this
important committee.

The General Assembly has considered the theme of "General
and complete disarmament" annually since 1959. The threats to international
peace and security faced by the world today are in some important respects
different from the threats of 40 years ago.

When we met last year, the horror of the terrorist attacks on
New York and Washington was fresh in our minds and our resolve to stamp out
terrorism strong. While governments continue to be deeply concerned about
terrorism, our role in this Committee is to ensure that the processes of
disarmament continue.

The order imposed by the circumstances of the Cold War no longer
exists, and our thinking on disarmament must reflect the new realities of today.
For instance, by signing, on May 24, 2002, the Strategic Offensive Reductions
Treaty, States that were once adversaries agreed to reduce the number of
strategic nuclear warheads from 2,200 to 1,700 by the year 2012. While the
reductions could have gone further and even though the Treaty would have been
more reassuring if it provided for irreversible disarmament, transparency and
effective verification, the agreement should be welcomed as a new sign of
cooperation. The world awaits and in fact seriously needs more of the same.

Practical disarmament measures to consolidate peace, regional
disarmament agreements, and especially the measures adopted to curb the illicit
traffic in small arms and light weapons can be re-energized. These steps, along
with the strengthening of the relationship between disarmament and development,
can have tremendous effects by improving the conditions for human security
throughout the world.

Mr. Chairman, the threats posed by biological and chemical
weapons have received much attention, partly because rather small amounts of
material can have such pervasive and devastating effects. All of us have seen
the fear and hysteria that trace, but deadly amounts of anthrax can produce.
Because these threats respect no borders, multilateral efforts towards their
elimination are absolutely necessary. The world’s security now depends on how
well States can adapt to these new circumstances. It is a duty of the
first-order.

During these next few months, the Fifth Review Conference of the
Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) will re-convene to complete work on
negotiating a legally binding verification protocol. The first session of this
Review can hardly be termed a success.

A re-energization of this process is clearly called for, and
this is the reason why the Holy See decided to accede to the BWC on 4 January
2002. As stated in the Holy See Declaration attached to the instrument of
accession to the BWC "the tragic events of 11 September 2001 have led to a
clearer and more widespread awareness of the need to build a culture of
multilateral dialogue and a climate of trust between all the members of the
human family. At this particular point in history, instruments of cooperation
and prevention constitute one of the most effective safeguards in the face of
heinous acts such as the use of biological weapons, capable of indiscriminately
striking at innocent civilian populations".

When the BWC, prohibiting the development, production and
stockpiling of bio-weapons was opened for signature in 1972, it was the
first-ever arms control convention to completely ban a whole class of weapons.

However, it lacked mechanisms for monitoring or verifying
compliance. In 1995, work began to draft concrete measures to ensure countries
comply with the Convention. The setback that occurred at the Review last year
must be overcome because the future Biological Weapons prohibition regime must
be strengthened.

The 145 States Parties to the BWC should agree on a
comprehensive list of measures, perhaps to be implemented in stages, that will
ensure a strengthening of the BWC through increased transparency and an increase
in potential detection and deterrence of prohibited activities. Such an approach
will build confidence in the BWC.

In the past year, two important conferences — involving the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) and the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) —
were held in the nuclear weapons field. Here again, troubling signs of discord
were evident.

As stated in the Holy See Declaration attached to the instrument
of accession to the CTBT on 13 June 2001, "the Holy See is convinced that
in the sphere of nuclear weapons, the banning of tests and of the further
development of these weapons, disarmament and non-proliferation are closely
linked and must be achieved as quickly as possible under effective international
controls".

A major step forward was taken when the CTBT was opened for
signature in 1996. When the Conference on Facilitating Entry-into-Force of the
CTBT was held in 2001, 161 States had signed and 87 had ratified the Treaty. But
now the momentum appears to have stalled. While all nations and peoples must be
grateful that a moratorium on testing is still holding, the resistance to
achieving the requisite number of ratifications threatens a collapse of the
architecture of the non-proliferation regime that has painstakingly been built
over many years.

The second conference, the First Preparatory Conference for the
2005 NPT Review, also revealed the stalled nature of nuclear disarmament. At the
2000 NPT Review, the Nuclear Weapons States pledged "an unequivocal
undertaking to accomplish the total elimination of their nuclear arsenals".
A program of 13 Practical Steps was adopted for systematic and progressive
nuclear disarmament. But the hopes raised in 2000 were dashed in 2002 when it
became clear that the Nuclear Weapons States are not adhering to the 13 Steps.

The ABM Treaty, now abandoned, and the CTBT were both integral
to the 13 Steps. How can that which was agreed to in 2000 be cast aside just two
years later? It must not be forgotten that genuine multilateral efforts are
required to achieve nuclear disarmament. These, by their very nature, possess
the potential to guarantee universal and permanent norms which bind all States.
In this respect, the NPT remains the centrepiece of the global nuclear
non-proliferation regime and the value of the NPT depends on all parties
honouring their obligations. It plays a critical role in efforts to prevent the
spread of nuclear weapons, especially to terrorists and States that support
them.

Mr. Chairman, the concern of the Holy See increases as we see
the non-proliferation regime, with the NPT as its cornerstone, in disarray. The
old policies of nuclear deterrence, which prevailed during the time of the Cold
War, must lead now to concrete disarmament measures, based on dialogue and
multilateral negotiation, which are essential values in the disarmament process.
Through the instruments of international law, they facilitate the peaceful
resolution of controversies, help better mutual understanding and foster a
climate of trust, cooperation and respect between all States. In this way they
promote the effective affirmation of the culture of life and peace, which is
based upon the values of responsibility, solidarity and dialogue.

The Holy See has stated in this Committee many times and repeats
now: There can be no moral acceptance of military doctrines that embody the
permanence of nuclear weapons. They are incompatible with the peace we seek for
the 21st century; they cannot be justified. These weapons are
instruments of death and destruction.

The cooperation among governments, including the military,
humanitarian organizations and other representatives of civil society in
implementing the Landmines Convention has been exemplary in building up trust
and goodwill among all concerned groups. The physical or ideological distance
between concerned groups or similar difficulties facing disarmament activities
need not be an insurmountable obstacle. "In this era of interdependence, it
is no longer tolerable to condemn, through inaction, entire populations to live
in fear and precariousness" (Address of the Holy See to the Fourth
Meeting of Parties to the Ottawa Convention, Geneva, 19 September 2002, n.
8).

Mr. Chairman, this Committee has done valuable work over many
years in raising the norms and standards for disarmament in all its aspects.
Though the cycles of history bring with them both advances and retreats, we must
keep our minds focused on our goal of reducing the causes of war. Pope John Paul
II's World Day of Peace Message for
2002, entitled "No Peace without
Justice, No Justice without Forgiveness", expressed a great hope,
"based on the conviction that evil, the mysterium iniquitatis, does
not have the final word in human affairs" (n.1).

The techniques of mediation, negotiation and verification are
all being advanced today. They provide a basis of hope for humanity. These are
the steps we must support in the continuing quest to eliminate the weapons of
war.